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词条 Drop Me Off in Harlem
释义

  1. Notable recordings

  2. Lyrics

  3. Notes

  4. See also

"Drop Me Off in Harlem" is a 1933 song during the Harlem Renaissance composed by Duke Ellington, with lyrics written by Nick Kenny.[1]

A.H. Lawrence writes that the song originated from an off the cuff remark from Ellington. Nick Kenny had hailed a taxi, and offered to share it with Ellington. Kenny asked "Where to, Duke?", and Ellington replied "Drop me off at Harlem". Kenny then fashioned lyrics from Ellington's remark and presented him with them a few days later at the Cotton Club.[2]

The meaning goes beyond this casual remark. Harlem had become the American black peoples' first secure home. Finally, they had a community of their own where they could be safe from harassment. For the first time blacks could relax, enjoy themselves and be creative by their own standards. It was a wonderful thing to arrive home among your own and be respected. Thus the lyrics say 'Drop me off in Harlem, Anywhere in Harlem' because it was all good!

Notable recordings

  • Duke Ellington and his Orchestra, February 17, 1933
  • Ella Fitzgerald - Ella Fitzgerald Sings the Duke Ellington Songbook (1958)
  • Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong on The Great Summit (1961, re released 2001)
  • Richie Kamuca - Drop Me Off at Harlem (1975)
  • Ran Blake - Duke Dreams (1981)
  • Sun Ra - Nuclear War (1982)
  • George Shearing Quintet - "Back To Birdland" (Telarc 2001)

Lyrics

Drop me off in Harlem

Any place in Harlem

There's someone waiting there

Who makes it seem like Heaven up in Harlem

I don't want your Dixie

You can keep your Dixie

There's no one down in Dixie

Who can take me 'way from my hot Harlem

Harlem has those southern skies,

They're in my baby's smile,

I idolize my baby's eyes

And classy up-town style

If Harlem moved to China,

I know of nothing finer,

Than to stow away on a 'plane some day

And have them drop me off in Harlem

Harlem has those southern skies,

They're in my baby's smile

I idolize my baby's eyes

And classy up-town style

If Harlem moved to China,

I know of nothing finer,

Than to stow away on a 'plane some day

And have them drop me off in Harlem

If Harlem moved to China

I know nothing finer than to be in Harlem

Notes

1. ^Lawrence, A.H. Duke Ellington and His World (New York: Routledge, 2003), 189.
2. ^Lawrence, A.H. Duke Ellington and His World (New York: Routledge, 2003), 189.

See also

  • List of 1930s jazz standards
{{Duke Ellington}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Drop Me Off In Harlem}}{{1930s-jazz-composition-stub}}{{pop-standard-stub}}

6 : Songs with music by Duke Ellington|Songs about New York City|1930s jazz standards|1933 songs|Songs with lyrics by Nick Kenny (poet)|Jazz songs

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